Farmers meet to tackle 'land grabs' - in pictures

From 17 to 19 November, more than 250 small farmers and civil society activists gathered near Sélingué, in southern Mali, for the first international farmers' conference to tackle 'land grabs'

Thursday 24 November 2011 04.00 EST

Hundreds of small farmers and civil society activists gathered at the Nyéléni Village, a centre for agro-ecology training facility near Sélingué, southern Mali, for the first international farmers’ conference to tackle the global rush for farmland Foreign investment in Mali's arable land
increased by 60% between 2009 and 2010, according to a report published to coincide with the conference.

In a longstanding tradition of Via Campesina, the international peasant movement, the conference kicked off with a 'mystica' – a creative ceremony intended to depict sociopolitical struggles and stimulate debate

Estimates suggest that
nearly 230m hectares of land – an area the size of north-west Europe – have been bought or leased, largely in Africa, mostly by foreign companies, in thousands of secretive deals made since 2001

While large land deals have received increasing attention from international organisations, conference organisers, from the Malian national farmers' organisation and the international peasants' movement
La Via Campesina, argue this has often been directed by large NGOs and rarely by small farmers themselves

Djibo Bagna, of the Network of Farmers' and Agricultural Producers' Organisations of West Africa (Roppa) addresses the conference, which was attended by delegates from more than 30 countries. ‘We are so impressed with the African movements,’ said Rafael Alegria, a founding Via Campesina member from Honduras. ‘They have helped us articulate a truly global voice’

Ibrahima Coulibaly, president of the National Confederation of Peasant Organisations (CNOP) in Mali, said: ‘The land has belonged to our communities for generations. We are here to find solutions, to fight together against the national and multinational agendas that seek to displace us. That all starts with telling our stories and organising to mobilise farmers’

Women from Kolongo greet African and international delegates in their village. Kolongo is the site of a number of
contentious land deals. One farmer explained: “We have been living in our villages for hundreds of years, yet nobody came and told us about these projects. Then one day, this machine came and started to dig. They gave us a paper which we could not read. So we had to show it to somebody who could tell us what it said. The paper said that we had to leave our land and our farms."

A conference delegate walks past what used to be a cemetery in Kolongo, home to Mali’s most contentious land grab to date. ‘They dug up a cemetery, they robbed us of our harvest and ruined our land,’ said one local farmer. ‘We organised a forum in Kolongo one year ago and we are still struggling for our rights, but we are really suffering’

‘We are decolonising Africa here,’ said Elizabeth Mpofu, from Zimbabwe. ‘Our job is to come up with democratic declarations at the grassroots level. It’s up to us to make sure that they reach our governments.’ The
global alliance against land-grabbing, launched at the conference in Nyeleni, aims to strengthen networks of small farmers and establish a Peoples' Observatory to document cases of land grabs. It will gather information and evidence about the process and the impact it is having